Hi all, my new to me 70 Dart 440 has the orange box and the ballast resistor still all hooked up. Is this correct? Is the distriutor electronic,no points? Thanks
Anything is correct for modified. To answer your question as specifically as I know how, electronic ignition did not debut from Chrysler until May of 1971. Also, the orange box, to my knowledge was never offered right from the factory. It was a Direct Connection/Mopar Performance piece. But as mentioned, it is an improvement over points, at least in the sense that you no longer have points to wear out. Plenty of racers have proven through the years that a point type ignition in good shape with a hot coil can run every bit as good as electronic ignition. The difference is normally, the electronic ignition does not wear out like points do.but correct for modified, not stock?
It's a good setup. Every bit as good or better than any MSD, IMO.Thanks for al the replies,Im going to run it as is.Its working fine, so Ill let sleeping dogs lay.
yep.. same space the box of condoms took up in the glove box in the '80's.Yep spare ballast resistor, VR and ECU. They take up no space.
yep.. same space the box of condoms took up in the glove box in the '80's.
Good to go, run it !Hi all, my new to me 70 Dart 440 has the orange box and the ballast resistor still all hooked up. Is this correct? Is the distriutor electronic,no points? Thanks
View attachment 1715987034
Or the 440 lolNot correct for 1970, no.
Keep an extra ballast resistor in your glove box. It's the 'weak link' AND small, cheap, & easy to replace on the road.Thanks for al the replies,Im going to run it as is.Its working fine, so Ill let sleeping dogs lay.
yep.. same space the box of condoms took up in the glove box in the '80's.
muh huh.Could not get a full box of EXTRA LARGE in the 65 Dart GT's glovebox. ;)
It's all about on how you set them up. I have ran a stock single point Distributor that has been curved with no issues. I now run a older Axcel duel point with a Super coil on my van (340) with no issues. My 69 340 Swinger has a Prestolite duel point (stock) with no issues. I just did the first tune up sense installing the 340 in 87' (around 65,000 miles) and the points looked the same as the day I installed them, but the rubbing block was a little thin as for why I changed them out. I hope the new set and condenser will be as good. Go back to my first sentence, it's all on how you set them up. I always set the points with the distributor out of the engine and if the dwell is off a little, I again remove the distributor and do the adjustment. The electronic ignition is not "FAIL SAFE" you still need to adjust the Air Gap. The modular and or control box can also fail without warning. Note: Never had an electronic ignition so I can not tell you which is best but I am content with the points set up. My 340's are mostly stock but I would think at a higher RPM the electronic set up would be better, though the duel points is better on the bounce than the single points.Anything is correct for modified. To answer your question as specifically as I know how, electronic ignition did not debut from Chrysler until May of 1971. Also, the orange box, to my knowledge was never offered right from the factory. It was a Direct Connection/Mopar Performance piece. But as mentioned, it is an improvement over points, at least in the sense that you no longer have points to wear out. Plenty of racers have proven through the years that a point type ignition in good shape with a hot coil can run every bit as good as electronic ignition. The difference is normally, the electronic ignition does not wear out like points do.
65,000 miles out of a set of points?It's all about on how you set them up. I have ran a stock single point Distributor that has been curved with no issues. I now run a older Axcel duel point with a Super coil on my van (340) with no issues. My 69 340 Swinger has a Prestolite duel point (stock) with no issues. I just did the first tune up sense installing the 340 in 87' (around 65,000 miles) and the points looked the same as the day I installed them, but the rubbing block was a little thin as for why I changed them out. I hope the new set and condenser will be as good. Go back to my first sentence, it's all on how you set them up. I always set the points with the distributor out of the engine and if the dwell is off a little, I again remove the distributor and do the adjustment. The electronic ignition is not "FAIL SAFE" you still need to adjust the Air Gap. The modular and or control box can also fail without warning. Note: Never had an electronic ignition so I can not tell you which is best but I am content with the points set up. My 340's are mostly stock but I would think at a higher RPM the electronic set up would be better, though the duel points is better on the bounce than the single points.